RHA MA-450i

Score

Sections

Pros

Cons

Some top-end harshness

Key Features

Review Price: £39.99

10mm dynamic drivers

Machined aluminium earpieces

Seven pairs of rubber tips

Braided cable

iPhone/iPod remote control/handsfree housing

The RHA MA-450i earphones are out to impress on first glance, or at least first touch. Their buds are made out of machined aluminium, they have a fabric-braided cable and – unlike the predecessor RHA MA-350 – they offer an inline iPhone remote control too.

DesignLast year, we were pretty impressed with the hardy metal bodies of the RHA MA-350. You don’t often see aluminium earphones for under £30, and while a big part of the appeal of metal is the look and feel, they’re more likely to survive being trodden on than plastic earphones like the rival Sennheiser CX 300. Not a great deal has changed design-wise in the MA-450i. The buds use the same bell shape and similar construction. This time, a frosted finish has been swapped for gloss, with shiny silver for the inner part of the earpieces, and black for the rear. Although a little more obviously eye-catching than the previous style, they hold onto a shred of class.

Also adding a little visual flair, the inner parts of the supplied eartips are orange rather than black. The shinier look and extra colour are nods to a youth audience, but RHA hasn’t gone too far here, like – for example – JVC’s slightly ridiculous-looking JVC HAFX1X.It’s not all good news on the design front, though. The braided cable makes a good first impression, seeming a little higher-end than standard plastic or rubber, but as is often the case with budget braid, it’s not of great quality. It had already started to unravel at the cable join by the end of our testing.The cable itself is also immensely prone to kinks – possibly the most we’ve ever encountered – and this also seems to make it quite tangle-happy. After a day in a coat pocket, it is reduced to a tanglesome mess. When “fancy” elements like the cable braiding backfire, we’re left wishing simple rubberised plastic had been used.

Accessories and FitThe rest of the accessories package is strong, though. With the RHA MA-450i you get a little felt carry case and an unusually expansive seven-set collection of rubber tips. All are single-flanged apart from one pair of dual-flanged jobbies, and all use the orange-centre design.

With so many tips to choose from, you’re almost guaranteed a perfect fit. And while the use of aluminium makes these earphones slightly heavier than some plastic models, it’s not something you notice in everyday use. They’re perfectly comfortable, and the sort of IEM earphones you can simply jam in a lughole to get a good fit – rather than having to fiddle around with ’em.

Thanks to the completely closed design, noise isolation is fairly good too. They can hack public transport with ease.The most significant design “innovation” of the RHA-450i, though, is the new iOS device handsfree and remote housing. It sits just under 15cm down from the right earbud, uses the same glossy/black silver design as the earpieces and has three buttons.

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These let you take calls, control music playback and volume with iPhones and iPodx. The middle button has a finger-hugging dip in the middle, making blind operation easy. And although it’s a little larger than some, its all-plastic construction means it adds no noticeable weight. Android phone users can use it as a handsfree call kit, but it won’t work as a controller for the music player. There are a few headphones for Androids out there, but we don’t blame RHA for prioritising the Apple crowd in its first in-ear remote controller pair.